? -v X I n ETOTtf& LEDaERr-PHItADELPHIA, MONDAY, JTJY 31, 1D16. J PtniLTG I.KOGtR tOMPANX' . fctortd )t f.wniori,rYfM froidentt John L MrtMU ltMlr unl Triutirer; rhlllft B. CWIin, SaBi Vrnilam,. Director. wbiTonlAi. noAnni j. E?r S. K. Ctoim, chkirmui. P. X. TTHAI-EY., v. ..i. ..i-. ......... Editor t. ..' -'HI. n Ill II II 1 t&HN C JfAKTI5f-.atr.ertt Diulntts Maniter ili inui iiT.i , ' T iT III ,l jhtttiiM d(ir t rfcuiio r.roora hdiidin. lmlt)endene Square, Philadelphia. ClTj!lI,.... Bread and Chestnut Street! ixrta Cm.,... ...... .rrc-t7flj Building- ' toik., i. .,,.., ..,200 Metropolitan Towrr iitw..i..,t...... ..,.8ia Ford ntillrtlng ixiutat. ...... 409 Olofce-Ufmomi rmiMtr.it CHfOJdO......... 1202 Tribune lJuIldlng NEWS BUREAU'S! WARrtmsTOK Buxstn....... tllret Building Kxir Toxs Btnuuu...i....,Th Time Rulldlng rattiit 1ICHK1D.............G0 Friedrlehtrii LoxtiOt HcciO,..... Marconi House. Strand ritti Bckd. .......... 82 Ilo Louis Is Grand SOBSCniPTIOM TEB.M3 By rrrlri Ix nt per week. Br man, fettpMd outitd of ITilUdelphla, except where roreurn poatar l required, one month, twenty T,tnl: one renr, three dollars, All mall mbtcrtpUon payable In advajice. KoTcfr-Suf)terlber wUhlntr address chanced Bintt glvo old a well a new address. MTLt. 00O WAtWUT KKTSTdNE, MAIM 0X I CT Address an communication to Rventno ,1 Ledgtr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. f'" " : ' JsKistcD 1r Tn MiiLinitrnu rostorrtos is ISCOND-CUSB MAIL UATTU. THB AVUnAOD NET TAID PAII.T C1K. CtJLATION OP TJtFI EVKNINO LEDOBn Fon junb Was us. sou PillxMphU. Meodir, J0I7 SI. 1MJ. That man'M the bttt cosmopolite Who love hi native country best. Tennyton, la the Doutschlnnd paying rent? numanla celebrated tho second an niversary of tho war by talcing tip an entirely now position, quaintly known as on tho brink. Another municipal employe falls try tho waysldo "for tho good of tho serv ice." Tho phroso Is apt, though ironic. Whoso Borvlce, gentlemen? That "shark,' in tho Schuylkill was only a seal. Thoso vvho watch tho Grand Jury aro'moro likely to learn tho where abouts of Philadelphia sharks than thoso who keep their ejfes on tho water. The Grand Duke Nicholas Is press ing on beyond Erztngnan toward An gora. There has been a strong impres sion that tho Grand Duko had already captured tho Turkish goat. Great national manufacturing as sociations havo already begun to npply for permission to hold, their annual gath erings In tho now convention hall, which proves that tho men vcro right who said that the building would bo ono of tho most valuablo publicity assets of tho city. Now that a few retail coal dealers havo begun to refund tho 10 cents a ton tax to their customers tho rest of them Will find it difficult not to follow suit. Tho tax was levied illegally. Tho oper ators liavo returned it to tho retailers, and fairness demands that tho retailers glvo it' up. It may bo doubted whether' tho Btato Department of Health has legal power to prevent Pennsylvania parents from taking their young children to Now York city; but only thoso parents who Wish to endanger tho health of their off spring will resist the actions of the de partment offlcors whllo tho epidemic pre vails. It is doubtless true that ninety Ave per cent of tho householders of tho city overload tho ashcans. Probably al most as many never uso tho trashcan at all. Thot is why wo havo dirty streets. No municipality on earth can force the people to keep the streets in tho condi tion in which they ought to be, unless it receives tho active and hearty aid and co-operation of private citizens. It Is not uncommon to see a man sit calmly In a trolley car, tear a letter into a thousand pieces and calmly throw it out of tho window, either on Chestnut street or anywhere oIbo. Such a man needs edu cation, and th way to glvo it to him is to put him in JalL There were only 10,954 registered automobiles in this State In 1906, paying fees of $42,460, The number registered thus far this year is 201,307 and tho fees collected amount to J2.146.597. The greater part of this enormous sum is -very properly turned over to tho Highway Department for improving tho roads. It fa nearly ten times tho amount which has been apportioned to Pennsylvania out of tba congressional appropriation for good roads. Tha fatal objection to tho Demo cratla good roads legislation is that it distributes tho money in accordance with. political rather than an economic plan. Its purpose la to'provido petty graft for the politicians rather than to improve the national highways. Indeed, there aro no national highways anyway. And it has teen only in recent years that there have been, any State highways to speak of. Tload-bulldlng has been committed to the local communities, and they have had no better roads than they are willing to yay ior. The appalling catastrophe in New JTork resulted 4n a. surprisingly small toes of life, according to present reports. "Jfhether Incendiaries were at work or not in a question which may never be deter pained. The circumstances surrounding Km explosions are suspicious. It must i recollected, however, that munitions r dangerous to handle and the likelihood ? accident Is great. Baltimore was tha own ot &n explosion of less magnitude VWty months ago, but St waa never pwd that it was maliciously caused by pfrit n'rii It has been suggested that UtteMft Jwrta fer tha shipment of ex jntrr bIhmiW be earned by the Govern Bliirt. Uf oft frost tha great cities. WfaHtuM' such a schscae In feasible or pat - (to t kip CoBsWartng- th vast MP C yawwr a.s aywuniie wb;cjj Um ftimpHi oW t wt two. Mm mmartMitilm Jut is that there- ptmB btamtM mr MsMdaota. T iu tt&? jpfrrmiir? fagprfl. snftaG? ) $ji turn btisawdtr m4 th bsjM tmom i t iwt.iry ef , New York catastrophe ocqutreJ nt an hour when few people were about In different circumstances, It 'Is altogether probable that the loss In life would havo parAlUfed the loss In money. Investlgd tlons nre under way, ai usual, but It may be hoped that In this affair they will bo more productive of constructive results than Is Usually the case. . GIVE US A WATCIl DOG THAT CAN WATCH TJEFOnB the little navy men In the ST- House carry their fight against an adequate Increase in the sea forces of tho nation to a finish they should give serious thought to what Is and has been happen ing in tho North Sea. In the aummsr of 1914 Winston Church ill, then First Iord of the Admiralty, had mobilized thn British navy In the Chan nel, ostensibly for practlco maneuvers. Whether ho had a premonition ot coming trouble, or whether It was ono of those lucky chances of which the historians write, does not matter. The fleet was on hand ready for actfon. As soon as mobili zation began on tho Continent Churchill ordored tho fleet to take up a position off Kiel, and tho ships got In sight of the German naval station before the Germans had time to move It is behoved by somo experts that If it had not been for this readiness, this prompt action, Grent Brit ain would havo been Invaded by a Ger man foico nnd tho country would havo been laid wasto as northern Franco has been devastated. Tho British navy has saved England and haa kept British soil practically Invio late. Tho British wcro unprepared on land, but they wero prepared on sea, for the reason that It was by tho sea alone that they anticipated Invasion. America ta In a similar position. If we havo nn adequate navy wo can defend our shores and destroy an enemy before ho gets In sight of land. If Representa tive Kltchln and thoso who bollovo with him havo their way tho enlargement of tho navy will bo delayed If not prevented altogether. Tho little navy men fought In tho House for a building program that should pro vide for flvo battle crulsors and no battle ships. They failed to carry their col leagues with them, for the naval bill at It was sent to tho Sonata called for four battlo cruisers and two battleships. The Senate, with n better appreciation of the exigencies of tho situation, amended tho bill by authorizing tho construction of four -battleships Instead of two along with tho four cruisers to which the Houso had consented. Contracts for theso are to be awarded this year, and arrangements wero made for a continuing program of con struction to extend over three years. Unless tho House ngroes to tho Senate program the navy will bo weaker in three years than It Is now. To keep our sea force up to Its present strength It is necessary to put in commission a new battleship every year to tako tho placo of the old ships which become obsolete. Tho navy Is weaker now than it was three years ago becauso of tho neglect of Con gress to authorize necessary construction. None of the new ships to bo votod can be put In commission in less than two years and it Is more likely ,to require threo years, even If work could begin as soon as tho contracts wore awarded. When the new ships aro built the navy will bo no stronger than it ought to bo now. It Is imperative that construction be con tinuous, and that enough new ships be built to tako the place of those which must- go to the scrap heap, as well as enough to strengthen us on the sea until we are able to meet any possible foe and beat him off. Such a program Is not dictated by hys teria, but by ordinary prudence. The nation demands it and the lower house will fall In its representative capacity un less it responds promptly and whole heartedly to the undoubted' urging of patriotic America. The President has put himself behind the Senate program and is using all his Influence in its favor. Whatever is dono with the Senate amendments to the army appropriation bill, It will be a grievous blunder to reduce the naval approprla tlons which the Senate voted. ON ALL FHONTS THE third year of tho war begins with the resurrection of the Serbian army and with it the completion of the circle of attack on the Teuton-Turkish allies. The Russians, choosing the earlier date for the celebration, have achieved an In credible victory, literally Incredible be causo the details are not yet known, and the mire statement of an advance at this time on a sixty-mile front passes belief. Strange and terrible things have hap pened in this year of war. Jt Is the year of Kut and Jutland and tho Serbian cam paign. It began with Russia stumbling backward and ends with Russia striding forward again. It marked the end of the old system of infantry attacks in the west and it begins with the successes of artil lery attacks. It began with the blackest and ugliest day of tha Allies and it ends with their brightest. Above all, it has been the year of Verdun and of shells. Yerdun, Where efficiency failed, and shells, wherein democracy became efficient, are the ilgh spots of tha drama's second act It differs from tha first in this: When the first qurtaln fell Germany's destiny was still victory or peace, now her destiny la between, peace and destruction. She has virtually announced that she cannot wn. Hr, appeals rp not (for Victory, but for the security of the German solL Her hope lies at last In the very thing ahe dapiaed the- strength and initiative and loyalty and siwi(y of the Individual sol $Utr. Far the puut haa bees mt at last Uii t tea t vnnMett Tom Daly's Column TUEW8 OVJt FEEUN'3 TVhtnevcr idw tlct off a iacht,' Tour feet plfo you lotfter a dchl Thev mulUptv so i Wherever jou go ' You can't tell hoio many jou've pacht. Our Btory of tho toast to tho President of tho United States, which Incensed the host of the Bristol luncheon, prompts J. H. Carr to call our attention to this bit of British Indifference to tho right and wrong In matters American, fi. catalogue of rare books put out by Reginald Atkln Bon, 97 Sunderland road, London, an nounces! Webeler Daniel, 'YesMent of V. 8.) Life of, by O T. Curtis, ports., 2 vols, 8vo, if. Y, 1870 8s 6d Many of ui are wonderfully versatile folks, but this announcement upon a Punno LEDOEn poster a few miles be yond Metuchen (N. J.) on tho way to Now York rather surprised us: PEGGY BIIIPPEN'S DAIRY. THD Caspar Carpenters were getting ready to desert their Germantown homo for a few weeks in tho country, nnd oerybody waq busy and nervous. Just then tho V, G. I. man nppenred at the door nnd presented the quarter's gas bill Caspar, Jr., took It In, and when 9-yrar-o'd Alfred saw It ho Jumped up excitedly, nnd yollcd! "Run nftcr him quick and tell him not to leave any moro gas." The Dctilschlnnd's Deck Passengers Und hler 1st Dcutschlnml mlt una somo moro yetl Then wo hnvo tlmo for a few nomina tions wo overlooked. First of nil Jo septula D. of Our Nnvee! T.et him bo secured In hla chair ulth red tape. Closo to him lot there bo room for several earn est but thick German readers who, not getting our subtlo wit, Imagino wo nro trying to commit leso majesto. C. B. L. sends from Atlantic City tho names of flvo Commissioners, and "Kltick." from the snmo town, besides reminding us of .Tosophus, craves room for "thnt ubiquitous scrlbo nnd Klarlon of Kultur, Hcrr J. Fr. Walsh." This will havo to complete tho "pcrsonao nil gratln." Dear Tom I placo In nomination Mr. G. TV. Clieo and brother, who, unconscious of tho honor to he thrust upon them, now placidly conduct a rod and white laundry at 437 North Sixtieth street, ns Tim cunns. I also claim tlio honor of having discov ered tho only Chinese specimen of this de lectable delicacy extant (George says ho'a a prdUuct of milk ; so there) E. V. W. WANTED If a Id for ceneral housework, either with or without laundrvlng. Address Tost ofllco Uox lis, Drexel Hill, Ta. Ad In Upper Darby Herald. LOST Generous reward for return of rlnc. platinum mounting. Ret with two dlamom nds and two sapphires: served to cust on Hun day In Ice cream class at Chrysalis dlnlne room, lji S. I'enn3lnnla ave. Iteturn to !la risher. 1H 8. I'enn9tvuma ne. and receho Renerous reword, Atlantic l'lt "Press," July 21. 1018. Don't you think this Is carrying tho trading-stamp Idea to an extreme? II. TIMS. James 'Whitcomb Riley "FOKT of common things," they said, Didn't they, Jim 7 Why, God bless that dear old hcadl Their sight was dim. Things wa'n't common at all to you, But slilnln' 'Ith glory, thro and thro ! I Common? To tako tho "Pipes o' Pan" And sing of this wonderful being, man; To find tho key of the human heart ; That ain't common at nil, that's Art. "Thoro's tho dear old homo once more, And thero'a mother nt the door." You Kept Hlnfiln' that-away. Dear old Jim, to tho end of the day; So God rest you, Jim but say, "Tako keer of yourse'f 1" Hain't got nothln' to Bay tonight, Hev you. Jim? Lyln' thoro so still In the light, Peckld and slim: Jest ns you wuz before great Death Took and stopped your gentle breath. No, you hain't got nothln' to say, Reckon you won't till the jedgment day But, dear old Jim, you've said your share; And when old Time sifts out them 'ere Poems of yourn on birds nnd bees. Morning and Bunshlne nnd hills and trees. Ditties of human hopes nnd fears All chock full of laughter nnd tears Fussy old Time I I guess he'll say. When they're layln' your dust away, ' Good by, Jim ; I think you kin Take keer of yourse'f!" M. C. DONOVAN. Waterbury, Conn., July 25. Our Etiquette Department A friend, one Mr. P., did call me up on the telephone some few nights ago and did invite Mrs. II. and me to play auction bridge with him and Mrs. P., Baying, not that the ladles care for auction, but just to make conversation. So we repaired to the house of the P's and proceeded with the game. Ere long did Mrs. P. say unto me: "You do not mind, 1 trust. It I talk nearly constantly during the play?" To this I replied- "Madame, you remind me of a tale told mo by a friend who visited an asylum for the feeble-minded. Entering the grounds, he beheld an Inmate who was striking himself violently upon the head with a hammer. My friend's curiosity being aroused, he addressed himself to a keeper nearby, Inquiring the reason for Buch appar ently peculiar action. The keeper pleaded ignorance, but suggested that my friend ask the Inmate for an explanation. This my friend did, and the inmate replied: "My dear sir, I strike myself thus upon my head with this hammer because It feels so damn good when I etop." Do you think, sir, that this story was apropos and in good form under the circum stances? II. H, II. Ans. la it the lady's practlco when talking "nearly constantly" to swing the hammer ditto? If so, yea. Valley Forge Park comes in for 200 acres of land, adjoining the reservation, which would have been split up into ten or a dozen farms operated by Italian agriculturists if we had been on the Job as we should have oeen. Tho property goes to the Park under the will of the late William Uhler Hensel, of Lancaster. On a June Sunday four years ago Mr. Hensel took Nicola D'Ascenzo and our self out to Fort Kennedy to sea this farm,' It was decjded that we should go about the securing of 10 Italian families to work the tract. D'Ascenzo took the matter up with Conte Adolfo Grazlanl, who was interesting himself in an "away-from-the-city" movement for his coun trymen, but the Count went home shortly after and our scheme died of inanition. The Hensel property was lost to the Italians, but strangely enough, D'Ascenzo Is now In a way to achieve national fame through the stained glass windows he has been commissioned to make for tha Memorial Chapel there. One, of course, bad nothing to do with the other: just a. coincidence, that's all ONB YEAR, 388 DAYS OF WAR Htat!Uo la eecUi- conlamporwr, ear to ha or not to b. yes, we Can guarantee he makes A HIT THE VOICE OP Socialism Prescribed as a Cure for the Vices of Society on the Ground That It Will Make People Less Mercenary Mayor Smith's Responsibility Other Current Matters This department i free to all readers who Utah to express their opinions on subjects of current interest, Jt is an open forum tintl thn hventno Ledger assumes no responsibility for tho views of its correspondents, NOT QUITE SO SIMPLE AS THIS To tha Editor of Evening Lcclpcr: . Sir "Tho root of all evil Is tho want of money." Tako away tho Incentive to gain and you do away with evil. Tho owners of tho Tenderloin properties r?coIvo largo sums for theso houccs of 111 fame The reason they rent them to these women nnd men of vice Is becaueo they rcceho larger rents than thoy would from respectable people. Tho reason theso men and women aro keepers of these dens of Infamy Is becauso of tho money there Is In It. The reason the girl of the street piles her trade Is bo cause she wants money. The euro for nil this vice Is through economic nclence, or socialism. When this world nccopts social ism then want will be banished, nnd tho In- ccntlve to gain through evil will ho nbol- Ished simply because every man and woman will bo able to receive not les3 than $10 per day for not more than six hours labor. It Is a proven economic and Bclentlfle fact, not theory nor a dream. Tho world Is ready for- It, and not until It Is adopted will we bo able to accept Christianity and civiliza tion. Vice Is not a necessity, but a condi tion. As has been said, Babylon had It and Philadelphia has It. Babylon had pov erty and Philadelphia has It. It Is to tho everlasting shame of human ity that after 2000 years of churchlnnlty we hae not Improved, but rather wo excuse our Immorality and greed by Baying "It al ways has been nnd always will bo." Wo have no right to call ourselves Christians unless we nre fighting to eradicate this Wee and poverty through the only way that It can bo abolished by Socialism. All So cialists nre not Christians, but, nevertheless, they aro fighting for civilization and Chris tianity. The world '"III not bo prepared to receive Christianity until It receives Social ism. "Every one according to his deeds" and "Do unto others as you would be done by" are synonymous. When you pray pray to God to show you tho way to Christianity and don't Insult Christ by praying to him until you are ready to recelvo him by work ing to prepare the way to relieve the world of vlco and Immorality. Let us be honest and be m'en Socialism Is material Christi anity, and over Its foundation stones you can see Christ walking with outstretched arms to receive you. Babylon and Phila delphia. Ye gods! nnd you prate of civilization-and Christianity You mock Christ and Jeer at your Creator. ROBERT B. NIXON, Jr. Philadelphia, July 29. PUTS IT UP TO THE MAYOR To the Editor of Eventnp Ledger; Br As to "Anonymous Citizens." Those who were arrested and who are now suing tho city are not anonymous. You talk about candor. And yet you print a letter from the man who is responsible for the whole rotten mess and who ought to bo made to account for it. JOHN J, FLEMING. Philadelphia, July 29, LEADING UP TO HENRY FORD To the Editor of Evening Ledger; Sir Man Is getting educated. He no longer fears the elements : he masters them. God and the angels and the devils are all being subjected to a critical analysis. It Is also a somewhat destructive analysis. With the disappearance of faith In ortho dox religion there have been opened again the old Questions: Where do we come from? Where do we go? Why do we live? Once upon a time the savages, the peas ants and the medicine men had an answer to all those questions. But the stories, told In the long-ago centuries do not solve the problems today satisfactorily. Now we are cynics. We need, a new faith that will be as a Gibraltar of inspiration. Until then those of us whq wish a new faith will be forced to battle with those who tight simply to retain the old faith so that they may proflt In wars, prostitutions, sex grop, Ings, cant and hypocrisies. And those of us who want a new faith to triumph are still a little undecided. We don't know whether even a, new faith would be worth while, where, there is any new faith that can be worth while. All we are sure of is that the old faith is no good. We view the centuries past, with their millions of bodies that have gone to their graves before us, and Into the future we see tha million ofcbodUa that are to go to their graves after us. ke them, we. too, shall be. Is this worth while? Is Jt worth while to piaster the elements whom only a grave U to be our final re-. wardt Who can prove that It isn't to be? The holy scrlpturea.'' aoate ot you an swer, tho wise ones "who have faith tbaf will Remove mountains." But how an you demonstrate It to us wht hav't the jtalth? We are no longer trustful Vo do not be THE PEOPLE lieve you Wo Judge vou by your perform ances, and your performances have been evil. Your clergy claim to have the faith, but they bless battleships. Your church ciders claim to havo the fnlth. but they Keep a vigilant cyo on the cashier and the bookkeeper. Your communicants claim to havo tho faith, but they Ho, Btcal, gossip nbout tho neighbors and count their coins ns If they wero rosary bends. Such a faith ns you profess, brethren and Bisters, ought to lift you fnr nbovo tho stars, where corruption Is a thing unknown. It Is becauso you have no such faith as you profess, that we, too, have bocn forced to strive for education ; and now no long6r do your dummy gods Intimidate us. We don't caro about, tho other world. Wo Want to live In this world. If there Is no faith then wo want tho things thnt you havo, or we .want a faith that In fluences you as well as us. Can ou give it to us? Can you accept It? That la to bo tho test of the new, tho vital, faith It Is to bo equally binding upon you nnd us. la tho new faith to bo given us In the theory of evolution? Go over that theory, you who are trying to adjust It to tho old stories, and see whether there Is nnythlng nbout It bo vitally a fact, bo far beyond doubt, that wo can Blng Its glories and fear not Is the new fa"h to bo found In politics? Roses do not grow In sewers of filth. Is the new faith to be found In lltera turo? Something moro than sex loVe Is needed to Inspire men and women to "fear God and take their own part." Is the new faith to be found In morality? Tho conventions of society create hypo crites. a Is the new faith to be found In the churches? Men have had churches over since thoy were men. and all that the churches have been ablo to give, after all these ages, are peanut sermons and unbe lief. Is the new faith to be found In man? Why In man? Why not, shouts tho old school, rather In skunks? Yet In man alone Is there hope. Man must live. It Is the burden of life that causes his unbelief. Re lieve him of those burdens and there shall again ahlne tho faith that shoots life through and through with Joy, love and faith. We cannot solve the mystery of the other world. Let us rather solve tho mystery of our ambitions. In ourselves are tho seeds of the new faith. And he who glveth to man the opportunity to find him self Ib greater than he who taketh a city or Bltteth astride a calf of gold. Here's, then, to Henry Ford! . ' CECIL MONTAGUE. Philadelphia, July 29. A STRANGER IN TOWN To the Editor of the Evening Ledger; Sir I have always held the view that Phlladelphlans are provincial right to their hearts' core. And this belief has a solid foundation, for It represents an experience of years nnd years' dealings with your townspeople. It was not more, than 20 hours after I had arrived In your city when three little items were furnished for my special benefit. And the most sincere readers may take these happenings at face value, After being served with some refresh ments I handed the proprietor a dollar bill. She Informed me that was too large a sum for her to change. I next gave her a quar ter. What do you suppose the fair one did? The dear soul went outside to get change, leaving me virtually in charge of her place. Ih a casual way I asked a conductor to direct me. About a half hour later this kind fellow reminded me of the street I de sired. What use taking space for the third In dictment? Perhaps some of your readers may not care for this sort of attack on the cherished customs of Philadelphia. Such should pardon a wicked soul. ARTHUR, THOMAS DYSON. Philadelphia, July 27. THE BRIDE IN AUGUST Consider now The fair June bride. The man In whom. She took such prlda Was late for tea It seems ho thinks Of baseball some. She thought hl thoughts Were rill of home, And sad is she. Cheer up, fair bride I The bt of men So think of baseball Now and then; ' They're all the same. But you your fata Need pot deplore, The chances art He levea you more Than any gams. w Kansas City Journal. r What Do You Know? Queries o ooirraj Jiifc rl ill be answered in this column. Ten questions, fir nnsmrs to which evtrv well inlonned vcrson iionlil know, are asked dattu Quiz 1. What, where or nlio li Illlo? 2. What Is the I.nelnre Muliil? 3. What ! it Joint? Mho In Cnntnln Tryntt? 5. Whnt U the mtillrnl name for Infantile imrtiUMi.'.' 0 Where nre the T-eMrnnl Iilnmli? 7. Wlint ronnertlon linn Hie city-of SnrnJevo with the creat VMir? 8. Conicrffln U planning to oilionrn nn Septrm- Ixr 0. line there ever been n lonsrr con tinuous heRitlon? 0. Itow mnnr Ktntr have rnrmtltuttonnl pro hibition ot the liquor trnfllc? 10. How far la It from l'lilludeliihln to naltl more? Answers to Saturday's Quiz 1. Jtinnln lit emrncrit In nffenihrs nKiilnut the1 Cerinunn, the AiiMrlanx anil tho Turlin. 2. Jamei Itoblnton, Superintendent of Police. 3. Scene of greatest TurltUh prrfeecutlonit of Chrlitlunn, Armenia. 4. In Knclnntl Tehlclri keep to tho left. li. Itohert Ilronnlne wrote "The Hint and the llook." 0, A nlcblftcltr li n rote br the people! usually the term U nnplleu to refcrriiiluni nn to m hat form of covrrnuient thrr UeMre or what ruler, 7. Mother ''nrey's ch!clfnt utorinr petrels, n species of sea blrilM. 8. A horse's thropplr: hU windpipe. 0. A leading; question: one so phrased br the questioner ns to elicit n desired answer, 10. To hue the wind: to Keep il ship close hauled. Standing of Colleges BiHtor of "What Do You Know" Can you tell mo the official standing of the fol low colleges: Colby, Delaware State, Lafayette, Colgate? Can you tell me where I could get a bulletin giving the standing of colleges In the United States? HEADER. Thero has never been an offlc'al classifi cation of American individual colleges. The Bureau of Education, however, a few years ago Issued a list of colleges which met a certain standard. Lafayette and Colgate were Included In It. A letter addressed to tho Bureau of Education, Washington, D. C, would puj you In the way of getting the list Aviation Schools Editor of "What Do You Know" Will you kindly tell me where thero Is a free school of aviation? MAX DOBKIN. We know of no free school of aviation. How Far a Ship Sinks Editor of "What Do You Know" Taking the caBo of the Titanic as nn example, would you kindly explain to what depth a Bhlp goes when sunk In water of a great or unknown depth.7 B. S. It sinks to the bottom of the sea. Words of Multitude Edtor of "What Do You Know" Why do we speak of a lot of quail as a covey? Does the word mean anything, or Is It Just made to fit tho case 7 POCONO. Covey comes from the French verb "couver," to hatch, and It has been brought over Into English, So a covey of quail Is properly a mother and her brood. The word Is one ot a large number of terms used to Indicate numbers, of which brood Is also an example. We speak of a batch of bread, a bench of bishops, a bevy ot roses or ladles. a board of directors, a catch or a take of fish, when describing the number caught, or a school of fish or whales when they are In the water; a clump of trees, a cluster of grapes, a collection of pictures, a crew of sailors and a crowd of people, a fell of hair, a fleet of ships, a flight, a swarm or a hive ot bees; a galaxy of beauties, a gang of slaves or thieves, a herd of cattle, a host of men, a Utter of pigs or puppies, a mob of rough fellows, a muster of pea. cocks, a mute ot hounds, a nest of rabbits or ants or tables, a nursery of trees, a panel ot Jurymen, a pride of lions, a rookery of Beats, a shoal of mackerel, a shock of corn, a sheaf of wheat, a skein ot ducks, a skulk of foxes, a string of horses, a stud of mares, a suit ot clothes and a suite of rooms, a team ot oxen and a tribe of goats. Meaning of Nowadays .EdKor of "What Do You Know" A friend told mo that "nowadays" was not an Idlomatlo phrase combined by use into a single word, but was a corruption of some thing else. Is he right? II IC Your friend is right, 'Nowadays" is a corruption of "in our days," which was spoken as If It were "1" pour days." Then the' first part of It waa dropped and It be came ''nour days." The transltloitvto now adays then became simple. Poets Laureate Editor of 'tyvhat Dq You Know" Are all tho British poets laureate burled In West minster Abbey! JpHN KEAT8, JR. No. Robert Bridges, the present laureate, Is still alive and he t not burled any where. Flv of the IS dead laureates are burUd In the Abby They ar Bn Jonson, Sir William Davenant, John Dryden. Nicholas Howe, and Alfred Tennyson. WHAT WE READ TWO YEARS AGO And Somo of the Strange Things Wc Said and Thought and Did When War Broke . Out WHAT wero tha Important events of the last week in July two years ago? Wo know now. But two years ago, with tho temperaturo up In tho nineties arid Vacations on, wo read lazily and thought lazily, and tho greatest catastrophe of our tlmo was on our heads before we know It. Tho Important events as disclosed In tho newspapers wero tho failure of the) Ulster conferenco and tho death of four rioters In Dublin, tho preliminary matches for tho Davis Cup. In tennis nnd tho trial of Mme. Cnlllaux In Paris. For n week 'theso events had been brewing. To b sure, on the very day when President Wilson was compelled to withdraw tha namo of Thomas D. Jonet for the Federal Rcservo Board and Colonel Iloosovelt was sued by William Barnes thero wero two Items of foreign news which nttracted a llttlo attention. One was the ultimatum Bent to tho diplomatic corps at Duraz2o by the Moslem Albanians and tho other was tho ultimatum cent by Austria to Serbia'. Neither on tha. day nor tho nox,t was there any Indication thnt theso two cvonts wero not equally Important. It sectni silly now, but qulto frankly, what did we Americans Know or card about Serbia? Wero thero any Serbians In America? Then they wcro "hunklcs," nothing more. Vaguely wo recalled something about the Balkan wars, but tho Inst thing most of us remembered nbout Serbia was that her King" had been assas sinated years ago. Had Austria sent an ultimatum? Well, the Sorblani had nn army of a sort, but they wouldn't daro to fight tho Dual Monarchy. , Localizing the Trouble Presently It seemed that Serbia had t ejected tho ultimatum. Just how or why wai not clear. In fact, It was not known that In tho ultimatum Austria had demanded a share In Serbia's Internal Juilsdlctlon. So wo wont on, watching tho cxtinordlnary spurt of tho Boston Ihnvcs, and suddenly a menacing word nppcnYed In tho public prints. It was "localization." It seemed that without any of thoso picllmlnnry declaration dear to our romantic hearts Austria and Sorbin wore at war and thero was n dan--ger. If Germany and Franco nnd Russia wero trying to localize the conflict, to keep It down along tho Danubo, then thcio was a chance but no real danger. London nnd Berlin and Paris wero bring ing prcssuro to bear, Russia waa asking for time, Jusscrnnd bald it would not spread. But of course they had to bo prepared (tho word didn't havo the same significance then) for everything, so Franco and Russia wero mobilizing quietly. Mobilization meant llttlo In our young lives then. Wo couldn't seo why der mnny kicked up such n fuss about It, while sho was doing It herself. We) trusted Sir Edward Groy, with a passion nto faith In good Anglo-Saxon honesty, when ho Invited nil tho Powers to quiet down nnd come to a council as of friends. Polncaro had just seen tho Czar and re port had It that ho was met at Stockholm by tho Kaiser. Llttlo by llttlo wo got round to Wllholm. Wo remembered that ho had been called tho War Lord. Wo saw pictures of him with the captions telling us thnt ho could unleash tho dos of war. And thero wero llttlo "boxes" with statistics proving that tho war would cost $54,125,000 a day. Tot ho was ""I sending his relatives to talk to tho Czar nnd warning Russia not to, Interfere, and having the most a'mlcnblo relations with England. It Is certnln that on the' 30th of July; 1914, when tho world had hardly, got used to tho Idea of an "Austro Serblnn" war, not one man In ten thou sand foresaw a world In arms. But two years ago today things had happened. London Hoped for the Worst It was a Friday morning and you sat down to your paper with a llttlo thrill. Tho wholo first page was about war. Battles had been fought In Serbia, but worso yet, and moro thrilling, Germany, was threatening Russia, .England wras beginning to bo nervous. Two German lloutenants had been defeated by An thony Wilding and Norman Brookes In tho Internationals. What has happened to the Germans we do not know, but Wilding has died since, a aoldler. We, no moro than he, were disturbed that day. Then from London came a new word: Armageddon. We hadn't heard It since tho campaign, and there were many who wanted to know what con nection therp was between the Pro gressive party and a world war. London was confident of the worst, but Paris was hopeful. Russia was still only partly, mobilized; Germany was dark, but not openly threatening. The war waa still between Austria and Serbia. That is where wo were two years ago today, In that attitude of mind. W wonder now that it could be so, that W could have been so simple-minded and so careless. We think of the two terrible years, In which we, also, have had a share, and we are aghast at our own stupidity. But It Is not altogether stupidity, not al together our Isolation, which left us so blind. What made us careless and un afraid was not Ignorance, but faith. Two years ago we wero as children; we had, not lost our hopes for tho world nor our trust la human nature. We beljeved, and clung fiercely to the belief, that men were true and honest, and, if dull, at least dependable. We fancied that we wero , civilized and that wars were left tqr thai backward nations of the globe. It Ij easy now to say that wo were fools. II Is hard to realize that, misled, baffled cruelly played false by events, our heart! were better then. Two years of wai have taught us much; but their chief leBson has pot tflen the value of pre paredneas. It has been that mankind i not to bo trusted. That faith Is vain. That hope Is a mockery. And that forc persists. It has taught us that Napoleoa was o, true prophet when ho said that God- was on tba aids of the largest battalions. But, thank Heaven, (t h Hft us the hope that thot right may. some times, hayo those battalions ready take sides with God. Tomorrow's article tciii itoJ. with tie tn I of Jtsmt J. itti and uHitU4 sMti i jLwetican enttimtnt at that ttos. i 4